8 research outputs found

    Hot salt stress corrosion cracking by silver chloride in Ti-6Al-2Sn-4Zr-6Mo

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    Hot salt stress-corrosion cracking (HSSCC) of titanium alloys has been found in the presence of chloride and other halide salts. Here, a series of AgCl HSSCC tests on Ti-6246 were conducted using a two-point bending rig at 380-500°C to determine the boundary conditions of stress and temperature. Rapid failure occurred after 24 hours above 440 °C, whilst the trigger stress of HSSCC was determined to be 400 MPa at 380 °C. Energy dispersive X-ray during scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM-EDX) suggested the formation of metallic silver and chlorides of active alloying elements Al, Sn and Zr. The transgranular fracture surface is expected to be linked to an underlying hydrogen embrittlement via hydrogen charging from the corrosion reactions

    Hot salt stress corrosion cracking by silver chloride in Ti-6Al-2Sn-4Zr-6Mo

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    Hot salt stress-corrosion cracking (HSSCC) of titanium alloys has been found in the presence of chloride and other halide salts. Here, a series of AgCl HSSCC tests on Ti-6246 were conducted using a two-point bending rig at 380-500°C to determine the boundary conditions of stress and temperature. Rapid failure occurred after 24 hours above 440 °C, whilst the trigger stress of HSSCC was determined to be 400 MPa at 380 °C. Energy dispersive X-ray during scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM-EDX) suggested the formation of metallic silver and chlorides of active alloying elements Al, Sn and Zr. The transgranular fracture surface is expected to be linked to an underlying hydrogen embrittlement via hydrogen charging from the corrosion reactions

    Understanding strain localisation behaviour in a near-α Ti-alloy during initial loading below the yield stress

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    Near-α Ti-alloys such as TIMETAL® 834 are known for their superior mechanical properties at high temperature, and as such are found in applications where high strength and improved fatigue performance at elevated temperatures (>450°C) are required. However, these alloys can be susceptible to cold-dwell fatigue; a failure mechanism that is not well understood. The present work investigates the strain localisation behaviour during cold creep and the implications it has in terms of dwell susceptibility for two different bi-modal microstructures. Slip traces and strain distributions have been analysed for different material conditions by employing High-Resolution Digital Image Correlation (HRDIC) in combination with orientation mapping. Using this approach, it was possible to distinguish deformation patterns in primary α grains and transformed-β colonies, loaded incrementally to stress levels of 70%, 80% and 90% of the yield stress. Different prior β-grain morphologies didn’t affect the average strains when stresses are low; but strain distributions have been affected by the β-grain morphology. Material with coarse transformation product accumulated larger amounts of plastic strain compared to material with fine transformation product, at the same relative stress levels. At low stress levels, slip bands have been detected both in primary α, as well in the transformed-β phase, cutting through the lamellae, for the material condition with a coarse transformation product; on the other hand, for the material conditions with a fine transformation product, slip bands are localised only in primary α grains at low stress levels. It was also found for both conditions that at low stress levels slip bands are found in grains that are well oriented for basal slip. Based on these observations it is discussed if b-ligaments are significant obstacles to dislocation movement. Finally, the requirement of crystal-plasticity modelling to take into account differences in crystallographic orientations and the elastic and plastic anisotropy of HCP-titanium will be discussed and considered
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